Sell v. Columbus , 127 F. App'x 754 ( 2005 )


Menu:
  •                            NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
    File Name: 05a0244n.06
    Filed: April 1, 2005
    No. 03-4654
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    BONNIE SELL et al.,                                )
    )
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,                     )
    )   ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
    v.                                                 )   STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
    )   SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
    CITY OF COLUMBUS et al.,                           )
    )
    Defendants-Appellees.                      )   OPINION
    )
    )
    )
    Before: MARTIN and GILMAN, Circuit Judges; and COHN, District Judge.*
    RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge. Bonnie Sell and her mother, Natalie Cuckler,
    were evicted from their residence by Columbus Code Enforcement Officers after the officers
    discovered that the two women kept 33 dogs and 4 birds on or about the premises in unsanitary
    conditions that, in the officers’ opinion, posed an immediate threat to the women’s health. Sell and
    Cuckler subsequently brought this action against the City of Columbus and against the individual
    officers, claiming that the officers had unconstitutionally evicted them without a pre-eviction
    hearing. After the district court entered summary judgment in favor of the defendants, the plaintiffs
    *
    The Honorable Avern Cohn, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Michigan, sitting
    by designation.
    -1-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    appealed. A prior panel of this court reversed the district court’s grant of summary judgment and
    remanded the case for further factfinding.
    On remand, the district court again concluded that the individual defendants were entitled
    to qualified immunity, but submitted to the jury the question of whether the city had violated the
    plaintiffs’ due process rights. The jury found that the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights were not
    violated. Judgment was subsequently entered in favor of the city. For the reasons set forth below,
    we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A.     Factual background
    Sell and Cuckler are two elderly women who live together in a one-story, two-bedroom
    house in Columbus, Ohio. At the time the following events transpired, Sell was 65 years old and
    her mother, Cuckler, was 83. The two women are avid animal lovers who had joint ownership of
    some 33 dogs and 4 birds, which they kept either in cages inside their home or in kennels
    immediately outside.
    In November of 1998, Barbara Penn, the director of a Columbus organization called Animal
    Rescue, became concerned about the large number of dogs being kept by the plaintiffs. She
    contacted Dr. Robert Lautzenheiser, the Public Health Veterinarian for the City of Columbus, and
    asked him to pay a visit to the plaintiffs’ residence in order to check on the health of the animals.
    Accompanied by Cal Collins, an official with the city’s sanitation department, Dr. Lautzenheiser
    arrived to inspect the plaintiffs’ animals on the morning of November 20, 1998.
    -2-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    During this hour-and-a-half visit, Dr. Lautzenheiser examined all of the dogs, finding them
    to be “in good physical shape.” Some of the older dogs had chronic health problems, but, according
    to Dr. Lautzenheiser, “they were being taken care of. They were in good condition.” The two men
    also inspected the residence’s living room and kitchen areas. Dr. Lautzenheiser found that
    [o]f course walking in the house, there was a distinct odor that animals were
    definitely in there. In the living room area, we did not find any bowel movement or
    droppings or anything like that on the floor. It was—you know, it appeared to be
    clean. I could not state whether the dogs had been wetting on the floor or not. So
    those spots could not be determined. [In t]he kitchen area, there was no bowel
    movements in there. The dogs that were in cages, there were a couple of cages that
    did have fresh droppings in them that could have just come when we walked in the
    door.
    When asked at trial whether the situation presented “unsanitary conditions,” Dr. Lautzenheiser
    responded that “[a]t the time that we were there, [it] was not in our opinion, a health risk.” He also
    felt that Sell and Cuckler were not “rookies” when it came to taking care of a large number of dogs.
    Approximately a week after Dr. Lautzenheiser’s visit, Sell became seriously ill with the flu.
    This prevented her from cleaning out the outdoor dogs’ cages twice daily, as was her custom. The
    illness also impaired her ability to clean out the cages of the indoor dogs, although she claims to
    have attended to them at least once per day and to have been diligent in mopping up any “accidents.”
    During Sell’s illness, someone—the record is unclear as to who—filed a formal complaint with the
    City of Columbus Department of Trade and Development regarding the number of dogs at the
    plaintiffs’ residence. In response, defendant Anthony Arnold, a supervisor with the department,
    directed defendant John Cross, a Code Enforcement Officer employed by the department, to
    investigate.
    -3-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    Cross arrived at the plaintiffs’ house on the morning of December 3, 1998.                 Two
    representatives from the city’s Adult Protective Services were already there, standing outside and
    chatting with Sell. On seeing Cross, Sell became nervous and asked him if he was there to take her
    dogs away. Cross replied that his priority was to make sure that the residence was safe for the two
    women to live there. He then called for backup, and defendant Mike Bartley, another Code
    Enforcement Officer, arrived on the scene a few minutes later.
    While Cross and Bartley spoke with each other outside the house, Sell went inside and,
    anxious about her animals, called Penn (the director of Animal Rescue) for assistance. Penn in turn
    asked to speak to the individual in charge. At this point, Sell called over to Cross, invited him into
    the house, and passed him the phone. Cross and Penn spoke briefly, after which Cross began
    looking around the house. He inspected the front living room area and then investigated the
    backyard, finding that the house in general exhibited an “[o]verwhelming smell of urine, dog feces,
    [and] dog urine.” In addition, he noted feces on the floor, as well as “trash and debris.” He
    observed “probably nine or ten dogs in cages in the kitchen area and one dog tied to the refrigerator,
    and dogs locked up in every bedroom and maybe in the basement, and general unsanitary
    conditions.”
    Cross exited the house and walked over to Bartley, who had been waiting outside, telling him
    that “it was bad in there . . . I think I need to vacate it.” In response, Bartley—who had not yet gone
    inside the house—told him that “[i]f it needs to be vacated, go ahead.” The men proceeded to make
    several phone calls. They contacted their supervisor, Arnold, and asked him to come over. In
    addition, the men called the Humane Society and Animal Control to assume responsibility for the
    -4-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    plaintiffs’ animals. Another Code Enforcement Officer, Kenneth Reed, had heard about the situation
    on the official radio channel and also arrived on the scene.
    After Arnold inspected part of the house, he gave Cross the authorization to issue an
    Emergency Vacate Order. Cross then completed and signed the eviction form, which stated:
    Inspection of the above referenced site reveals that an emergency exists which
    requires immediate action to protect the public health and safety. The conditions
    causing this emergency to exist are as follows: Unsanitary conditions due to amount
    of pets (33). Vacate property immediately—do not reoccupy until code violations
    are abated.
    Cross gave Sell a copy of the order and instructed her and her mother to gather their immediate
    belongings and leave the property. The women were told that they could not return to the house
    until it was cleaned up, and that they could be arrested for trespassing if they did. In compliance
    with the order, the women moved out that day. The house remained unoccupied from December 3,
    1998 until January 6, 1999, when they finally moved back in.
    B.      Procedural background
    Sell and Cuckler promptly filed suit in late January of 1999, claiming that the
    defendants—Arnold, Bartley, Cross, Reed, and the City of Columbus—violated the plaintiffs’
    Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights. Both sides moved for summary judgment.
    The district court first considered and rejected the plaintiffs’ argument that the Code
    Enforcement Officers were not authorized under the Columbus City Code to issue Emergency
    Vacate Orders. With regard to the plaintiffs’ claim against the City of Columbus, the district court
    determined that the plaintiffs had failed to show as a matter of law that that the city was deliberately
    -5-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    indifferent in failing to train its Code Enforcement Officers regarding Emergency Vacate Orders.
    The district court then considered the defendants’ arguments. It held that the individual
    officers were entitled to qualified immunity, and it dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims against the city
    on the basis that they had not demonstrated as a matter of law that the city was deliberately
    indifferent to the constitutional rights of its citizens. The plaintiffs appealed.
    A unanimous Sixth Circuit panel reversed the district court’s grant of summary judgment to
    the defendants. Sell v. City of Columbus, No. 00-4467, 
    2002 WL 2027113
    (6th Cir. Aug. 26, 2002)
    (unpublished) (hereinafter Sell I). The panel concluded that it could not tell from the record whether
    the Code Enforcement Officers were authorized to issue Emergency Vacate Orders. 
    Id. at *7.
    It
    therefore remanded the case back to the district court on the issue of whether the Code Enforcement
    Officers were “duly authorized designees” of the Director of the Department of Trade and
    Development. 
    Id. at *6-7.
    The panel also concluded that further factfinding was necessary to determine whether the
    City of Columbus had failed to train the Code Enforcement Officers on how to handle Emergency
    Vacate Orders. 
    Id. at *8-9.
    With regard to the claims against the individual defendants, the panel
    reversed the grant of qualified immunity and again concluded that further factfinding was necessary,
    this time to determine whether a reasonable Code Enforcement Officer would have understood that
    “the health and safety risk posed by this particular emergency was such that immediate eviction
    without a hearing was necessary.” 
    Id. at *12.
    -6-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    On remand, the district court held that the Code Enforcement Officers were authorized to
    issue Emergency Vacate Orders under the Columbus City Code, a determination based on affidavits
    submitted by the Director of the Department of Trade and Development and his deputy. It further
    determined that the individual defendants were entitled to qualified immunity because, “on the date
    in question, there was no controlling case law that would have put the Code Enforcement Officers
    on notice that the situation confronting them was not sufficiently serious to justify immediate
    eviction.”
    But with respect to the plaintiffs’ claim that the City of Columbus acted with deliberate
    indifference in training the officers, the court concluded that there still existed a genuine issue of
    material fact. It therefore denied the city’s motion for summary judgment. A two-day trial focusing
    on this question was conducted. The jury returned a verdict for the city, finding that the plaintiffs’
    constitutional rights were not violated. This timely appeal followed.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A.     Standard of review
    The district court’s grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo. Therma-Scan, Inc. v.
    Thermoscan, Inc., 
    295 F.3d 623
    , 629 (6th Cir. 2002). Summary judgment is proper where there
    exists no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). In considering a motion for summary judgment, the district court must
    construe the evidence and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party.
    Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 
    475 U.S. 574
    , 587 (1996). The central issue is
    -7-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    “whether the evidence presents a sufficient disagreement to require submission to a jury or whether
    it is so one-sided that one party must prevail as a matter of law.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
    
    477 U.S. 242
    , 251-252 (1986).
    B.     The district court did not err in concluding that the Code Enforcement Officers were
    authorized to issue Emergency Vacate Orders
    The plaintiffs first argue that the Code Enforcement Officers were not authorized to issue
    Emergency Vacate Orders of the kind used to evict the plaintiffs from their home. At the time of
    the plaintiffs’ eviction, the relevant portion of the Columbus City Code provided as follows:
    If necessary to protect the public health and safety or the health and safety of any
    person where an emergency exists in an occupied building, the administrator shall
    order that the premises be vacated forthwith and further that they shall not be
    reoccupied until the conditions causing the emergency to exist have been abated and
    approved by the administrator.
    Columbus City Code § 4509.06(b) (1994). (All of the relevant Columbus City Code sections were
    amended by city ordinance on June 1, 2001.) Pursuant to then-existing § 4501.025, the term
    “administrator,” when used without clarification, referred to “the development regulation
    administrator.” A “Code Enforcement Officer,” the title held by the individual defendants in this
    case, was a “development regulation administrator or any of his duly authorized representatives.”
    Columbus City Code § 4501.073 (1994).
    Complicating the matter further is the fact that the Development Regulation Division was
    abolished effective February 8, 1998, over ten months before the events in question took place. This
    fact leads the plaintiffs to argue that “[t]he city on its own abolished the Development Regulation
    Division and its Administrator and transferred, on its own and illegally, the authority to issue
    -8-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    immediate vacate orders to rank and file Code Enforcement Officers.”
    The district court, in its original disposition of the case, rejected this argument. It found that
    the “language in Columbus City Code §§ 4509.06 and 4501.073, referring to the ‘development
    regulation administrator’ appears to be inadvertently carried over from the time when the
    Development Regulation Division still existed.” In place of the Development Regulation Division,
    the district court determined, “stands the Department of Trade and Development.” The district court
    further credited the testimony of Michael Farrenkopf, manager of the Code Enforcement Section for
    the Department of Trade and Development, who stated that all Code Enforcement Officers are
    authorized to issue Emergency Vacate Orders.
    Sell I, however, concluded that “[i]f the office of ‘the Development Regulation
    Administrator’ no longer exists, it would logically follow that the city would have transferred the
    authority to issue emergency vacate orders to the person holding a position equivalent to that of ‘the
    Development Regulation Administrator’ in the new Department of Trade and Development, rather
    than to all Code Enforcement Officers.” Sell I, 
    2002 WL 2027113
    , at *6. The panel further
    determined that “[t]he definition of ‘administrator’ in the housing code was removed by repeal in
    2001, but the definition of the ‘director’ was added. ‘Director’ when used without clarification
    means the director of the department of development or his or her designee.” 
    Id. (emphasis added)
    (citations and quotation marks omitted). Because the record failed to provide sufficient information
    upon which the panel could determine whether the Code Enforcement Officers were duly authorized
    “designees” of the Department’s director, Sell I then remanded the question to the district court for
    further factfinding. 
    Id. at *7.
    -9-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    On remand, the district court again concluded that the Code Enforcement Officers were duly
    authorized to issue Emergency Vacate Orders. It relied on two affidavits, one from George Arnold,
    the Director of the Department of Trade and Development, and the other from his deputy, Kathy
    Kerr. Arnold stated that “it was my intention, understanding and belief that Code Enforcement
    Officers (including supervisors) were my duly authorized representatives to enforce the provisions
    of the Columbus Housing Code and to issue notices and orders consistent with the provisions of the
    Code.” Kerr likewise averred that “Code Enforcement Officers (including supervisors) were
    delegated the authority to make inspections and enforce the provisions of the Columbus Housing
    Code. This delegation included the authority to issue ‘emergency orders,’ as provided for in
    Columbus City Code § 4509.06.” The district court found that these two affidavits were “sufficient
    to establish that, on the date in question, the Director of the Department of Trade and Development
    had designated all Code Enforcement Officers as his duly authorized designees for the purpose of
    issuing Emergency Vacate Orders.”
    The plaintiffs contend that the district court erred in so ruling. They claim that the two
    affidavits do not demonstrate that the Director has taken specific action to authorize the Code
    Enforcement Officers to carry out the task of issuing Emergency Vacate Orders. In support, they
    point to the fact that (1) there was “never a document signed by the Director naming any particular
    person as a person authorized to order emergency evictions,” (2) neither Cross nor Anthony Arnold
    recalls ever “signing any document” authorizing them to issue Emergency Vacate Orders, and
    (3) none of the Code Enforcement Officer positions “lists issuing immediate vacate orders as one
    of their duties.” The plaintiffs also argue that the district court unreasonably relied on the affidavits
    -10-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    of George Arnold and Kathy Kerr because “whether a Code Enforcement Officer is a duly
    authorized designee is a legal conclusion” that neither the Director nor his deputy are qualified to
    reach, and because the affidavits are conclusory.
    Whether the Code Enforcement Officers are duly authorized designees is a close question
    given the paucity of the record. The affidavits of Arnold and Kerr, however, provide evidence for
    the proposition that the Code Enforcement Officers were authorized by Arnold to issue Emergency
    Vacate Orders as his representatives. In addition, although the Columbus City Code repeatedly
    refers to directors and their “designees,” it never mentions a written or formal requirement for the
    designation of authority. An informal or verbal designation appears to have been sufficient. We
    therefore conclude that the district court did not err in determining that the Code Enforcement
    Officers were authorized to issue Emergency Vacate Orders.
    C.     The district court did not err in refusing to enter summary judgment in favor of the
    plaintiffs
    The plaintiffs next argue that the district court incorrectly refused to grant their summary
    judgment motion against the city and against the individual defendants. In support of this claim, the
    plaintiffs repeat nearly every argument considered by both the district court and by Sell I.
    With regard to the plaintiffs’ claims against the individual defendants, the district court
    correctly rejected the plaintiffs’ motion because they were unable to prove, as a matter of law, that
    the defendants violated the plaintiffs’ alleged right to a pre-eviction hearing. The district court did
    err, however, in granting summary judgment on the basis that the individual defendants were entitled
    to qualified immunity. This issue is discussed at greater length below.
    -11-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    With regard to the plaintiffs’ claims against the City of Columbus, the district court
    determined that the claims raised genuine issues of material fact that precluded the granting of
    summary judgment. The question of the city’s liability was therefore presented to the jury, which
    rendered a verdict in favor of the city. In circumstances like this, “where summary judgment is
    denied and the movant subsequently loses after a full trial on the merits, the denial of summary
    judgment may not be appealed.” Jarrett v. Epperly, 
    896 F.2d 1013
    , 1016 (6th Cir. 1990). This
    ruling is based on the principle “that the potential injustice of allowing the improper denial of a
    motion for summary judgment is outweighed by the injustice of ‘depriv[ing] a party of a jury verdict
    after the evidence was fully presented . . . .’” Paschal v. Flagstar Bank, FSB, 
    295 F.3d 565
    , 570-71
    (6th Cir. 2002) (quoting 
    Jarrett, 896 F.2d at 1016
    n.1). The plaintiffs therefore may not appeal the
    denial of their motion for summary judgment.
    Even considering the merits of the plaintiffs’ appeal, the district court did not err in denying
    their summary judgment motion. Taking the facts in the light most favorable to the defendants, the
    plaintiffs would have been unable to demonstrate as a matter of law that (1) the Code Enforcement
    Officers were unauthorized to issue the Emergency Vacate Order, (2) the City of Columbus failed
    to adequately train the Code Enforcement Officers in issuing Emergency Vacate Orders, and (3) the
    plaintiffs suffered a deprivation of their constitutional rights. Factual questions surrounded these
    issues, and summary judgment was therefore inappropriate.
    D.     The district court erred in concluding that the individual officers were entitled to
    qualified immunity as a matter of law, but this error proved harmless
    -12-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    The plaintiffs further allege that Code Enforcement Officers Arnold, Bartley, Cross, and
    Reed violated the plaintiffs’ Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights by ordering them out of their home
    in advance of a pre-eviction hearing. This argument was rejected early on by the district court,
    which granted the defendants summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity. Sell I reversed.
    It found that further factfinding was necessary to determine whether the officers had considered
    other alternatives before issuing the Emergency Vacate Order. On remand, the district court once
    again held that the officers were entitled to qualified immunity as a matter of law. The court found
    that the “officers did consider less drastic options prior to concluding that immediate eviction was
    necessary to protect Plaintiffs’ health.”
    In evaluating the district court’s decision on this issue, we start with the proposition that even
    if a plaintiff’s due process rights are violated, municipal officers are entitled to immunity unless their
    conduct “violate[s] clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person
    would have known.” Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 
    457 U.S. 800
    , 818 (1982). Determining whether a
    defendant may avail himself of qualified immunity involves a three-step inquiry:
    First, we determine whether a constitutional violation occurred; second, we
    determine whether the right that was violated was a clearly established right of which
    a reasonable person would have known; finally, we determine whether the plaintiff
    has alleged sufficient facts, and supported the allegations by sufficient evidence, to
    indicate that what the official allegedly did was objectively unreasonable in light of
    the clearly established constitutional rights.
    Williams v. Mehra, 
    186 F.3d 685
    , 691 (6th Cir. 1999) (en banc) (relying on Dickerson v. McClellan,
    
    101 F.3d 1151
    , 1157-58 (6th Cir. 1996)). Moreover, “[i]f the law at that time was not clearly
    established, an official could not reasonably be expected to anticipate subsequent legal
    -13-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    developments, nor could he fairly be said to ‘know’ that the law forbade conduct not previously
    identified as unlawful.” 
    Harlow, 457 U.S. at 818
    . Qualified immunity will therefore “be defeated
    [only] if an official ‘knew or reasonably should have known that the action he took within his
    sphere of official responsibility would violate the constitutional rights of the [plaintiff], or if he took
    the action with the malicious intention to cause a deprivation of constitutional rights or other
    injury . . . .’” 
    Id. at 815
    (quoting Wood v. Strickland, 
    420 U.S. 308
    , 322 (1975) (second alteration
    in the original)).
    The key questions in the present case are (1) whether the alleged right in question—the right
    to a pre-eviction hearing before being displaced from one’s home due to potentially dangerous
    circumstances—was clearly established, and (2) whether the Code Enforcement Officers should
    have known that evicting the plaintiffs violated this constitutional right. With regard to the first
    factor, “[t]he contours of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would
    understand that what he is doing violates that right.” Anderson v. Creighton, 
    483 U.S. 635
    , 640
    (1987). In other words, “in the light of pre-existing law the unlawfulness must be apparent.” 
    Id. One of
    the few cases delineating the right to a pre-eviction hearing provides that “[a] prior
    hearing is not constitutionally required where there is a special need for very prompt action to secure
    an important public interest and where a government official is responsible for determining, under
    the standards of a narrowly drawn statute, that it was necessary and justified in a particular
    instance.” Flatford v. City of Monroe, 
    17 F.3d 162
    , 167 (6th Cir. 1994) (citing Fuentes v. Shevin,
    
    407 U.S. 67
    , 91 (1972)). In Flatford, for example, the city building commissioner asserted the
    defense of qualified immunity after he evacuated tenants from an apartment building found to have
    -14-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    faulty wiring. The dispositive issue in the case was “whether [the defendant’s] conclusion that an
    emergency situation existed was an objectively unreasonable decision in light of the information he
    then possessed, construing the evidence in a light most favorable to the [plaintiffs].” 
    Id. In answering
    the question in the negative, the court found that qualified immunity was appropriate, and
    that it operated to “avoid[] over-deterring officials where their duties legitimately require action in
    situations not implicating clearly established rights.” 
    Id. at 168;
    see also Mitchell v. City of
    Cleveland, No. 97-4206, 
    1998 WL 898872
    (6th Cir. Dec. 17, 1998) (unpublished) (applying Flatford
    and declining to find a constitutional violation in the evacuation of a residence plagued with
    numerous housing-code violations).
    Sell I instructed the district court on remand to further examine the question of whether the
    Code Enforcement Officers considered available alternatives before ordering the immediate
    evacuation of the plaintiffs. In particular, this court noted that
    [i]t is quite possible that a reasonable Code Enforcement Officer, after giving the
    matter due consideration, could conclude that the unsanitary conditions in the Sell
    and Cuckler home posed such an extreme risk to the health and safety of the two
    elderly residents that there was not time to order abatement of the unsanitary
    conditions or hold a pre-eviction hearing. But it is unclear if Cross, Arnold, and the
    other Code Enforcement Officers engaged in this sort of analysis.
    Sell I, 
    2002 WL 2027113
    at *12. The court further determined that the record was unclear as to
    whether the Code Enforcement Officers behaved the way they did “because they reasonably
    believed an emergency eviction without awaiting even an expedited hearing was necessary under
    the circumstances to protect plaintiffs’ health and safety, or because they never considered the
    -15-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    constitutional and statutory limitations on evictions without a hearing.” 
    Id. In remanding
    the case,
    the court instructed the district court to conduct further factfinding on this particular issue.
    In response to Sell I, the defendants submitted affidavits explaining their rationales in the
    moments leading up to the decision to issue an Emergency Vacate Order. Defendant Cross, for
    example, provided the following explanation:
    I considered other enforcement possibilities before concluding that an ‘immediate
    vacate’ was necessary. I considered issuing a notice of violation and allowing some
    time to clean the residence. There were a number of factors that, I believed
    precluded me from taking such action. The health of the two residents was an issue.
    Ms. Sell told me that she had been ill for four days and, as I recall, she told me her
    mother was ill. The age of the residents was also taken into consideration. The
    extent of the unsanitary conditions, the immediate risk to health that I believed was
    present, and the apparent inability of the residents to address the unsanitary
    conditions (I was there for several hours and no effort was made to address the
    unsanitary conditions) all weighed against a notice of violation with some time to
    address the health risk.
    Although the defendants’ responses directly address Sell I’s concerns, they do not establish
    as a matter of law that the officers acted reasonably in evicting the plaintiffs without a pre-eviction
    hearing. Per Flatford, Fuentes, and Mitchell, the law at the time of the eviction was clear that a pre-
    eviction hearing was not required where immediate evacuation “was necessary and justified in a
    particular instance.” 
    Flatford, 17 F.3d at 167
    . But whether the conditions at the plaintiffs’ residence
    rose to the level of creating a situation where an evacuation would be “necessary and justified” is
    a factual question that had not yet been developed. The district court, in its order, restricted its
    inquiry to whether a reasonable Code Enforcement Officer would have been aware that his conduct
    was illegal. This inquiry, however, turns on the factual question of how severe were the conditions
    the Code Enforcement Officers encountered at the plaintiffs’ residence.
    -16-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    Indeed, the record contains a contradictory mix of facts. The plaintiffs, for example, claim
    that their residence was never so filthy as to require immediate evacuation. In support, they point
    to the testimony of Carol Baldauf, an employee with a Cincinnati welfare organization, who was at
    the plaintiffs’ house on the morning they were evicted. She testified that, while the house seemed
    “cluttered,” she saw no signs of filth or of soiling. Baldauf also stated that she did not see any feces
    on the floor, thus contradicting the testimony of the Code Enforcement Officers. The plaintiffs also
    note the visit by Dr. Lautzenheiser, the Public Health Veterinarian for the City of Columbus. He
    had visited the house a few weeks before the eviction, and also stated that he saw nothing that would
    indicate a serious emergency. To the contrary, he explicitly noted that the house appeared to be
    clean and that there were no unsanitary conditions. The Code Enforcement Officers, on the other
    hand, testified that the residence was in need of immediate evacuation. Cross’s testimony, for
    example, directly contradicted Baldauf’s. He noted feces on the floor, as well as trash and debris.
    Cross also testified to an “overwhelming smell of urine.”
    Given this conflicting evidence, we have a case where “the jury becomes the final arbiter of
    [the officer’s] claim of immunity . . . .” Brandenburg v. Cureton, 
    882 F.2d 211
    , 215-16 (6th Cir.
    1989). Qualified immunity is ultimately a question of law properly addressed by the judge, but a
    jury trial is nonetheless necessary where, as here, “the legal question of immunity is completely
    dependent upon which view of the facts is accepted by the jury.” 
    Id. at 216.
    The question before us is complicated, however, by the fact that the district court did in fact
    conduct a jury trial on the plaintiffs’ claims against the City of Columbus. In that trial, the jury was
    explicitly asked whether the plaintiffs’ due process rights were violated and, in particular, whether
    -17-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    “an emergency existed, and [whether an] immediate vacation of the premises [was] necessary to
    protect the plaintiffs’ health and safety . . . .” The jury returned a verdict for the city, unanimously
    agreeing that the Code Enforcement Officers did not “violate Plaintiffs’ constitutional due process
    rights by ordering an immediate vacation of the premises.”
    In light of this finding by the jury, the question becomes whether the grant of qualified
    immunity was harmless error. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 61 (defining “harmless error” as an error or defect
    in a proceeding that does not “affect the substantial rights of the parties.”). The jury considered the
    same question with regard to the City of Columbus as it would have considered with regard to the
    Code Enforcement Officers. Its implicit finding that the defendants had demonstrated that “an
    emergency existed, and [an] immediate vacation of the premises [was] necessary” leads to the
    conclusion that the individual defendants were indeed entitled to the defense of qualified immunity.
    The district court’s grant of qualified immunity to the individual defendants, in sum, was
    erroneous. But in light of the jury’s verdict in favor of the City of Columbus, we conclude that the
    grant of qualified immunity was a harmless error.
    E.      The district court did not abuse its discretion in its choice of jury instructions
    Finally, the plaintiffs argue that the instructions given by the district court were
    constitutionally deficient and failed to articulate the appropriate standard by which emergency
    evictions are measured. They further claim that the district court erred when it instructed the jury
    as to what constitutes deliberate indifference.
    This court reviews a district court’s choice of jury instructions for an abuse of discretion.
    United States v. Beaty, 
    245 F.3d 617
    , 621 (6th Cir. 2001). The trial court has broad discretion in
    -18-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    determining what kind of language will be included in a jury instruction. 
    Id. An abuse
    of discretion
    will not be found unless “the instructions, viewed as a whole, were confusing, misleading, or
    prejudicial.” Beard v. Norwegian Caribbean Lines, 
    900 F.2d 71
    , 72-73 (6th Cir. 1990)).
    The contested section of the jury instructions reads as follows:
    You . . . need to decide whether one or more of the code enforcement officers
    violated plaintiffs’ due process rights when they ordered an immediate vacation of
    the premises . . . . The Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
    States prohibits the government from depriving individuals of their property without
    due process of law. And as I told you earlier, this means that as a general rule, the
    government must provide a notice and an opportunity for a hearing before it removes
    persons from their homes. However, there is an exception to this rule. In certain
    extraordinary situations, immediate vacation of the premises is justified. A prior
    hearing is not Constitutionally required where there is a special need for very prompt
    action to secure an important public interest and where a government official is
    responsible for determining, under the standards of a narrowly drawn statute or
    ordinance, that immediate vacation is necessary and justified in a particular instance.
    ...
    So [Columbus City Code § 4506.06(b)] sets forth two requirements that must be
    satisfied before a code enforcement officer can order that the premises be vacated
    without first providing an opportunity for a hearing. First, an emergency must exist
    in an occupied building. An emergency is a set of circumstances demanding
    immediate action, but not all emergencies require that the premises be immediately
    vacated. The second requirement is that immediate vacation of the premises is,
    quote, necessary to protect the public health and safety or the health and safety of
    any person, end quote. And, again, the burden is on the City of Columbus to prove
    by a preponderance of the evidence that both of these conditions were met.
    (Emphasis added.)
    The plaintiffs argue that the instructions completely “abandon[] the requirement that the
    eviction must be justified, in addition to being necessary.” They also claim that, under the district
    court’s instructions, an “emergency” could last for days and that the district court’s explanation that
    -19-
    No. 03-4654
    Sell v. City of Columbus
    “not all emergencies require that the premises be immediately vacated” is at odds with Flatford v.
    City of Monroe, 
    17 F.3d 162
    (6th Cir. 1994).
    But the jury instructions, taken as a whole, required the jury to find that an emergency
    existed and that an immediate evacuation was necessary to protect the health and safety of either the
    public or the residents. This comports squarely with the ruling that “[a] prior hearing is not
    constitutionally required where there is a special need for very prompt action [and immediate
    evacuation] was necessary and justified in a particular instance.” 
    Flatford, 17 F.3d at 167
    (citing
    Fuentes v. Shevin, 
    407 U.S. 67
    , 91 (1972) (emphasis added)). As such, the jury instructions were
    not confusing, misleading, or prejudicial. The wording of the instructions might not have been to
    the plaintiffs’ exact liking, but this does not mean that the district court abused its discretion.
    Sell and Cuckler further contend that the district court erred when it instructed the jury on
    the city’s alleged deliberate indifference in failing to properly train the Code Enforcement Officers.
    The jury, however, never reached this question, finding instead that the Code Enforcement Officers
    did not violate the plaintiffs’ due process rights in the first place. As such, we have no need to
    address this argument.
    III. CONCLUSION
    For all of the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
    -20-